This Woman Beat a DUI Charge By Claiming Her Body Brews Its Own Alcohol

Discussion in 'Science' started by Space_Time, Jan 4, 2016.

  1. Space_Time

    Space_Time Well-Known Member

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    Apparently this is a real condition. DUI charges against her were dropped. Is having her body make alcohol a good or bad thing?

    http://www.esquire.com/news-politics/news/a40905/dui-auto-brewery-syndrome/

    This Woman Beat a DUI Charge By Claiming Her Body Brews Its Own Alcohol
    Apparently, auto-brewery syndrome is a real condition.

    Getty
    BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
    JAN 2, 2016
    169
    Drunken-driving charges against an upstate New York woman have been dismissed based on an unusual defense: Her body is a brewery.

    The woman was arrested while driving with a blood-alcohol level more than four times the legal limit. She then discovered she has a rare condition called "auto-brewery syndrome," in which her digestive system converts ordinary food into alcohol, her lawyer Joseph Marusak said in interviews this week.

    A town judge in the Buffalo suburb of Hamburg dismissed the drunken-driving charges this month after Marusak presented a doctor's research showing the woman had the previously undiagnosed condition in which high levels of yeast in her intestines fermented high-carbohydrate foods into alcohol.

    The rare condition, also known as gut fermentation syndrome, was first documented in the 1970s in Japan, and both medical and legal experts in the U.S. say it is being raised more frequently in drunken-driving cases as it is becomes more known.

    "At first glance, it seems like a get-out-of-jail-free card," said Jonathan Turley, a law professor at George Washington University. "But it's not that easy. Courts tend to be skeptical of such claims. You have to be able to document the syndrome through recognized testing."

    The condition was first documented in the U.S. by Barbara Cordell of Panola College in Texas, who published a case study in 2013 of a 61-year-old man who had been experiencing episodes of debilitating drunkenness without drinking liquor.
     

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